Do you worry about your digital security?
Vote for the results in the left column below or go straight to the results here.

Tuesday Highlights: Apple continues to be chip in trade and tariff wars with troubled Turkey threatening boycott of iPhones; Jonny Evans imagines ways "Apple's AI imaging vision may save lives"; new law proposal in Australia could fine tech firms up to $7.3 million for non compliance in handing over encrypted private data; researcher says warnings in macOS "trivial for malware to suppress and bypass"; Macworld calls PhotoBulk 2 a "Swiss Army Knife...for batch image processing" on the Mac; apparently Apple's aggressive arguments against Apple Park property taxes see company "claiming...cluster of properties around Apple Park is worth just $200"; Sainsbury supermarket experimenting with "scan, pay and go technology" in London; most analysts agree HomePod is at 6% marketshare, but disagree over how many have been sold; TrendForce study predicts budget version among new iPhones coming this Fall, starting at $699—more in our Hardware/Software section; Creqtive Bloq reviews 13" 2018 MacBook Pro with Blackmagic eGPU.

"The iPhone is only just starting to grow up: Flat sales of smartphones mask a third industrial revolution yet to reach its peak" ["Apple is not too worried. Any company that devotes so much of a two-hour presentation to playing with MeMoji cartoon avatars, demonstrating an app that mimics a two-way radio and showing an augmented reality Lego set cannot feel in existential danger. 'You're going to love those aerial screensavers!' Tim Cook, Apple's chief executive, exclaimed to app developers."] Financial Times [Paid Membership Required] 7:30 AM

"Apple No Longer Tells Users What Is Best For Them" Tech.pinions 7:59 AM

"Apple is overhauling Siri — and the voice assistant may finally catch up with Amazon's Alexa" Business Insider 10:29 AM

"Study: Apple News's human editors prefer a few major newsrooms" ["...humans, like algorithms, are prone to habit, and Apple News may have fallen into a pattern that Facebook and others have been trying to avoid: editorial bias."] Columbia Journalism Review 8:36 AM

"How continuity camera works in macOS Mojave and iOS 12: Continuity Camera lets you quickly add photos or documents to projects on your Mac using the camera on your iPhone or iPad. Here's how it works." iMore 5:07 PM

"What will the Mac be like in 2020? Apple announced that developers will soon have tools to port iOS apps to the Mac. Jason Snell takes a deeper look at this announcement and what it means for the future of the Mac." Macworld 8:15 AM

"Apple, J.J. Abrams team for music dramedy series Little Voice: Songwriter Sara Bareilles will serenade Apple viewers with original music." CNET 3:01 PM

"Tech giants to be targeted by anti-terror laws to help police access encrypted data" ["Telecommunications companies such as Telstra and Optus are not the only target, with multinational tech giants including Facebook, Apple and Google to also come under the new laws."] Australian Broadcasting Corporation 8:15 AM

"Girls are at higher risk of becoming phone addicts, report says: Specifically, girls who drink are nearly twice as likely to develop an addiction to their phones, according to South Korean researchers." CNET 7:24 AM

"Microsoft sinks a data center off the Scottish coast" The Verge 7:17 AM

"Photos show how Microsoft took a big step forward in its crazy plan to power the internet from the sea" Business Insider 7:28 AM

"GitHub Is Microsoft's $7.5 Billion Undo Button: Steve Ballmer spent years hating on open source software. Satya Nadella recognized that the service has become indispensable to programmers." Bloomberg 7:21 AM